Quebec minister optimistic WADA will vote to stay in Montreal | CBC Sports - Action News
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Quebec minister optimistic WADA will vote to stay in Montreal

Quebec's international relations minister says she is optimistic the World Anti-Doping Agency will accept Canada's offer on Thursday to keep the organization's headquarters in Montreal until at least 2031.

Contract with anti-doping agency set to expire in 2021

Quebec's international relations minister Christine St-Pierre says she's optimistic that WADA will remain in Montreal. (Francis Vachon/Canadian Press)

Quebec's international relations minister says she is optimistic the World Anti-Doping Agency will accept Canada's offer on Thursday to keep the organization's headquarters in Montreal until at least 2031.

Christine St-Pierre said Monday she will be part of a Canadian delegation that will make a final pitch to WADA's 38-member decision-making body later in the week in Seoul, South Korea.

St-Pierre told The Canadian Press that WADA is expected to make a final decision Thursday afternoon.

WADA's contract in Montreal is set to expire in 2021 and the agency had opened the door to moving elsewhere but reportedly changed course after a September meeting in Paris with St-Pierre and federal Transport Minister Marc Garneau.

Following the Paris meeting Garneau and St-Pierre said the agency agreed to negotiate an extension of the current deal on the condition it be improved.

St-Pierre wouldn't give details about the offier but said the federal and provincial governments did their homework and that she believes WADA's board will be satisfied with their presentation.

Montreal was first chosen as the site of WADA's headquarters in 2001.

St-Pierre has said the Montreal office employs about 85 people.